No. That description most closely matches a comet.
There are five officially recognized dwarf planets in our solar system: Pluto, Eris, Haumea, Makemake, and Ceres. These objects have not cleared their orbits of other debris, which is a key criterion for being classified as a planet.
"White dwarf" typically refers to a small hot star off the main sequence--after its collapse from a red giant. This is in contrast to a red dwarf which never got big enough to expand to a red giant. Pluto, in contrast, is a dwarf planet--far smaller than any star. It is essentially a big dirty snowball. So its albedo is high enough (it reflects enough light) to make it appear light gray in color.
yes
Dried Pasta,Frozen Bread
wet ones and frozen ones
Cast, imprint, amber, and frozen
1 Ceres is the largest object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and is classified as both a dwarf planet and an asteroid. It was the first dwarf planet to be visited by a spacecraft, NASA's Dawn mission, which orbited Ceres from 2015 to 2018. Ceres is composed of rock and ice, and its surface is covered with various types of craters and geological features.
There are dwarf hamsters their are Chinese dwarf hamster ( this hamster isn't classified as a dwarf they are just small hamsters) The winter white hamster Campbell dwarf hamster Roborovski dwarf hamster And they are different names and they all have different colors but syrian hamsters have more colors than dwarf hamsters
The frozen water in Antarctica is ice, not snow.
Name the different types of icons
I assume you mean a DWARF STAR. There are different types of dwarf stars; the white dwarfs are fairly hot - but the reason they are dim is that they have a very small surface area.
There are a bunch of types of hamsters, an the dwarf is already a type a hamster.